Thursday, April 30, 2020

HOT AUGUST NIGHT



The last round of my ten favorite albums, Part Two.
I hate to admit it but I love Neil Diamond. Some albums will get you laid, Breads “Baby I’ma Want You” and that’s reason enough to like Bread.
No one would ever accuse Neil Diamond of doing an album that would get you laid.
But I gotta tell you “Hot August Night” is so easy to listen to.
And I had a friend when I was a good little church boy named James Packard who did a rousing rendition of “Brother Loves Travelling Salvation Show”.
He did it so good that it might have gotten HIM laid a time or two, and I’m not sure if its OK to say that here or not, but there it is.
Me? That last side with “Holly Holy”, “I Am I said” and “Soolaiman” really does it for me.
Do you want to know how dumb I am?
When I was in the 6th Grade there was a kid at school named Mike Wright. He was like the Burt Reynolds of the sixth grade with a full beard and everything.
“I Am I Said” was a big hit, they played it every hour on the radio.
When It got to the chorus:
“I am I cried
I am said I”
I thought they were talking about Mike Wright.
“I am I cried”…get it?

Saturday, April 25, 2020

A TALE OF TWO TESTS

Last month it was "Everybody will get a test, OK? We got beautiful tests, the best tests. We're number one in testing."
Now its like "Not my tests".

Wednesday, April 22, 2020

BULLETHOLES HAS A DONUT


The doctor has had me track my blood sugar on a spreadsheet the last month. I went in yesterday with the results. He glanced at it for a moment.
“This doesn’t look too bad “ he said “A lot of 100’s and 120”s”
“Thank you sir”
Then he looked a little more deeply.
‘What’s this day… 220, 247 and 298? “
“That’s the day I had a coupla few donuts”
“Coupla few? What’s that?”
“Its like two or three. Maybe four. Ok, it was five donuts.”
“You ate five donuts?”
“Uh-huh. And maybe an apple fritter”

Saturday, April 18, 2020

MY SUPERPOWER

“And so I remind myself: my real challenge right now is a spiritual one. In the midst of an evolving, unprecedented crisis, can I truly practice living moment to moment? Can I take on this strange new life day by day, from a place of tender awareness rather than fear? Can I let go of the ways I thought life would unfold and save my strength to swim with the tide? Can I stay focused on what’s good, right now?” ~ Katrina Kenison, from “The gift of an ordinary day


*******

That is the challenge isnt it? I was just at the grocery. I see all the people. They are worried. Nervous. I want to reach out, but we have to keep our distance. So I find myself sauntering along with a stupid smile on my face waiting for someone to look up so I can give them my best “How do you do?”.
But people these days are so afraid to look up.
Twice, maybe three times I choked up a little over this distance that has had to be imposed. Its like a vaccuum. I just want to fill it.
A couple years ago I came into possession of a big Rudolph head. You put it over your head, and its got the big screen eyes you can see through. Suddenly you are a disney character. Ive had so much fun wearing that thing during Christmas; meetings, parties, even wore it to an art show.
An idea came over me two weeks ago. I should wear it to the grocery, with a little mask! So I posted a pic on FB and asked should I or should I not do this?
Of course everyone says yes. I could do it, it is my Superpower, doing stuff like that.
But SHOULD I?
So I made a dry run to the store. No mask, just trying to get a feel for people.
Two weeks ago was just like today. Every body is too nervous, too on edge. I don't want to appear to make light of this serious situation we are in. I don't want to disrespect anyone's dignity, or mess with their serenity. That’s the challenge.
But here one day, when things aren't so tight, maybe I wear my mask in.


''There are no easy answers, no clear path through any of this, other than caution, kindness, and care for ourselves and others.
That is the challenge...""


Until then I’ll just have to stick to a big smile and “How do you do?”










Tuesday, April 14, 2020

COUNTING TO ZERO BY JEFFREY LITTLE



1
I’m sitting inside a circle of duct tape, counting tissues. Everything’s either boned-up, ghosting, or it’s Gone. It takes me about an hour to work my way to zero. Nothing yet has plummeted from the sky, not even a turkey. I’m beginning to think that it’s all a practical joke of some kind, or a new way of counting to zero. I go on-line and buy myself a metric socket-wrench for seventeen bucks. You never know. It’s true. Just today I found out why they put the Do Not Remove tag on a mattress. It’s complicated and involves the French, the Dreyfus Affair. When you see a picture of him, it looks like he’s counting. No matter what you may think of the length of the baseball season, we still must respect the primacy of the numbers. The tallying appears to have no end. Another siren, another false alarm. Or a real alarm, but lacking context, and context is what we’re all struggling with here. If you stop and really think about it, has any of us ever seen the inside of an egg? It could be like a palace in there. Roll top desks and weird green lamps. Like in France. I walk up the stairs and I wash my hands.











2
I walk down the stairs and I wash my hands. The things we do in front of a mirror. Everyone is sort of sick. Maybe if a trellis of smoke filled the sky, or I saw someone moved on a gurney into a black sedan. But this, this is a television show. Outside it’s just a little empty, and nice. A neighbor kid on her bicycle and a breeze. A breeze! Have you ever tried to count a breeze? It’s tricky. Someone’s always coming in from the cold. When I think back and try to picture the way things were it looks a lot like today, only now through a buffer of glass. In the right light a pane of glass can be a mirror. I see a version of myself looking back into the house watching me watch the neighbor kid riding a bike. This reminds me of the obscure dread evoked in old movies of staring down into a winding staircase, a splash of dissonant piano with a single cymbal and the eyes, tied as they are to the stomach, the eyes go wide, then bottom. I realize I’m looking out the glass screen door with what could only charitably be called a slack-jawed gape. The neighbor kid’s seen worse. She brakes, and counts on her fingers the number of cats.











3
Everyone is waiting inside except the cats, the ferals and the nearly so. They think themselves responsible for this change in the situation, they patrol like lions, and at night settle upon the empty porches. Beyond hammerfall and doomcrack this is, for now, what’s left us. I would’ve imagined something a bit more gothic. Not zombies, these days they seem a little too stylized, but sewer beasts, or wendingos, or a bomb, something with a gravitas to its wake, like that silent cortege of stumps in Siberia, in the Taiga, what was Tunguska in 1908. That, I could wrap my head around. No school, no work, no beach to scurry to away from, I see a lot of people just staring at the sky. Walking around town in my six foot bubble of separation I see a lot of things, but nothing desperate, at least not today, or at least not yet anyway, that’ll come with the flies, or when the liquor stores are locked and shuttered, and the dry it comes in hard. The last, last straw. Windows are made for one purpose, really, push come to shove, windows are made to break, to shower a sidewalk with the shards of the new transactions, now that it’s been rearranged.











4
Lately I’ve been thinking a lot about our curtains. I want to open them, then I want to close them, I settle on open but I am unconvinced, I walk to the kitchen and I wash my hands. Today the number I need to know is 106, which is a larger number than yesterday, which was larger than the day before. The digits are twisted like balloons, as the nightly news broadcasts its warnings and careens from side to side. Six months from now we’ll have been returned to a semblance of normality or else we’ll be scratching at the earth with sharpened sticks, eyes peeled for a tuber or roots. I busy myself eying up the better branches. Our house, now, is always full. Wife, kids, cat, and work, cat, kids, wife. The steps lead somewhere, but where? I wake up and walk down the stairs and wash my hands, feed our cat and the cat plopped on the porch outside. This is my new commute. Someone has closed the curtains, which are deep, deep red. I feel like I’m inside of a vein. Coursing. The word for today is absentia. I heat up a cup of coffee, make a sour face like I’m working, then look out a window to see the sun, all the parked cars and the cats.











5
Still, it seems inevitable. No matter how many times I wash my hands the virus is somewhere waiting. It’s patient. Obsessively precise. Like an accountant or an actuary, as much as for exactly what the virus does as for what waiting on it makes of us. I need to anthropomorphize. I need to give it a face. Anthony Perkins. Nothing personal. I just woke up and I thought, Anthony Perkins, the coronavirus is Anthony Perkins. Now I can go about my day in peace. When I hear the mail jeep outside I feel just like a dog. And when I count I count to one hundred, but still to me it’s like counting to zero. Tomorrow they’ll have me count more. My failure is that I can’t not watch the news. I wouldn’t say that I pay it too much attention but I need to have it on, or available. It’s like being a methadone junkie, no kick but the kick of empty addiction. Usually, I don’t even turn up the sound. Our cat, in the window, looks at the near feral outside on the stoop, an entente is being agreed to. Our place, my family’s, in this informal arrangement, has yet to be determined. Bets, I can hear them being hedged. On the big board the odds keep changing.











6
We wipe down every surface here, only to wipe them all down again. I’m eating a sandwich and I bite my tongue. This is what it boils down to. Everyone is looking for someone to blame. Blame biology, blame life. If I had an electron microscope I could at least start to look inside of the envelope and satisfy some vague imperative. It’s a perfect day and the cats have moved from their porches out onto the lawns. I do a push-up and I count to zero, I wash my hands and I count to twenty, I walk outside and tomorrow moves another step closer, or away. At this magnification it’s impossible to tell. I feel quantum. Birds do bird things. I have no idea what the number is today so I just stroll across the grass to feel it give a little bit beneath me, then I go further down, to where the creek straightens before making a run for it underneath the cul de sac, and out the other side. I want to follow it as it moves through the dark. But there are surfaces that we need to wipe down first before we can wipe them down again. Nothing has prepared me for the next step, whatever the next step is. We eat dinner, we begin.




Jeffrey Little: “All things considered, I would rather be in Philadelphia, watching the Phillies swamp the Mets, eating a soft pretzel and drinking some ale. Heck, down the road in Wilmington watching the Blue Rocks, thinking of ale. Everybody’s missing something these days, or someone. This poem is thinking of them. For what it’s worth, I have three issues of Mudlark you could glance at, along with all the other fine issues housed there, now that you have the time. Also a poster; this poem makes it a Gordie Howe Hat Trick. I’ve always wanted to say that. I have two books of poetry from Spout Press (The Hotel Sterno and The Book of Arcana) and one from Rank Stranger Press (Five and Dime). I am supposed to thank the great, small State of Delaware for an established professional poetry grant. Thanks. Also, poems scampering here and there. Be well.”

Other Mudlarks by Jeffrey Little: The Secret Life of Nouns, Poster No. 154 (2018); Is Nature is as a Sound is as Zero is as the Hook Dog Blues, Issue No. 47 (2012); Biography As In Syntax: The Babble Poems, Issue No. 22 (2003); and crayola in arcana, Issue No. 15 (2000).




Copyright © Mudlark 2019

Monday, April 06, 2020

BULLETHOLES TAKES A WALK

I've lived in my house 4 months now. I finally did something my doctor has been begging me to do for years. I took a walk. He has BEGGED me, but I HATE walking. I drove around the block, its three quarters of a mile. Parked that car and set out afoot, hating every step. I got over to the next block. One of the houses had three younger guys in the front yard. As I approached they waved and gave me a hearty "Hello". They were smiling. I said hello back and a gave little wave.
"How are you doing?" one asked me.The other two looked at me expectantly, waiting for my answer.
That is when I realized these guys were starved for company. They were excited to see a stranger. Like they had been on a deserted island or something. I dont believe their reaction to my presence would have been as visceral any other time. Only now in this forced sequestration because of the COVID 19.
I gave them my best smile and friendliest voice.
"I'm doing great" I said, "How about you all?"
" We are great!" all three in unison, smiles just beaming at me. waiting for my reply.
I slowed down just a step, turned toward them, let a moment pass and said
"Just keepin' my distance, man" and they all three just laughed ..."Right, right, right." they said.
As I walked away I went into one of these little daydreams. I wish I had stopped and talked a little longer. Three complete strangers were so delighted to see me, and as the weeks go by as they have, suddenly I experienced a sense of hope. A sense of that maybe after all this isolation and separation, that maybe we will all fall in love with each other again. That is what we surely do need.
But there is more. I got home and I was getting a glass of water and kind of smiling to myself, thinking about this hope & love. And I thought "I need to go back out tomorrow, walking, and see who I can find". Me, who hates walking. In fact I CANT WAIT to get home tomorrow from work so I can go walking and I'm going to walk until I find somebody.
I just cant hardly wait!

Saturday, April 04, 2020

BULLETHOLES STAYS HOME





I bought a piece of art for my house. It needs to be framed, and I have a friend that works at Hobby Lobby. She does frames! I've had it for two weeks, but I thought Hobby Lobby was closed for this COVID 19 crisis until I saw the news yesterday. Hobby Lobby has stayed open, deeming itself "essential".
I sent her a text and yes she was working.
I wanted to take my art and get it framed so I can hang it up. And then I caught myself.
Having Millet's "The Gleaners" framed and on my wall is important to me, I can't wait to put it up, but its hardly essential.
The last ten years I've finally learned to play by the rules. I lived most of my life irresponsible, and in complete disregard for the rules.
"Rules" I said "are for suckers"
Thanks to NA and sober living I've learned to play by the rules. To live life on its own terms. Thats how I came to be able to buy this house.

My work is basically paying me to stay home 2 days a week. They are paying me to stay home, shelter in place, stay healthy. I'm really proud I didnt take a self serving self centered non essential trip to Hobby Lobby. Stay home Bulletholes. You could go to Hobby Lobby and come home dead.

Wednesday, April 01, 2020

A THANKLESS JOB


SHELTER IN PLACE



All of my 12 step meetings have gone online. I'm having to work from home today. I like to say I don't like people, but its just not true. People who need people are the luckiest people.
I'll never make it till Monday.
Can't Trump pass a law where we go to a Buddy System?
Where can I get Shelter In Place Buddy?